Afro-Carib-728x90

Grand Slam Track seeks bankruptcy protection as Michael Johnson pledges to continue fight

Grand Slam Track, the ambitious professional league spearheaded by Olympic sprint legend Michael Johnson, has filed for bankruptcy protection after canceling its final scheduled meet and failing to meet payment obligations to athletes and vendors.

- Advertisement -

The Chapter 11 filing, submitted Thursday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, confirms a dramatic reversal for a venture that launched with bold promises of six-figure prize money and a reimagined future for track and field.

From US$30 million promise to barely five figures

At its inception, Johnson publicly touted a US$30 million financial foundation designed to stabilize the league and attract the sport’s elite. Court documents now paint a starkly different picture.

In its filing, Grand Slam Track disclosed that it has less than US$50,000 in cash on hand, between 200 and 999 creditors, and liabilities estimated between US$10 million and US$50 million.

Johnson refuses to abandon the project

Despite the sobering financial disclosures, Johnson struck a defiant tone in a news release announcing the bankruptcy proceedings.

“I refuse to give up on the mission of Grand Slam Track and the future we are building together,” Johnson said.

MLK-Lauderhill-2026

The filing represents not an end, he insists, but a restructuring effort aimed at preserving the league’s long-term vision.

Big names, big expectations

Grand Slam Track entered the sport with immediate credibility, signing some of the most recognizable names in global athletics. World champions Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, Anna Hall, and Melissa Jefferson-Wooden were among the stars who committed to the project, lending legitimacy to Johnson’s goal of keeping track and field relevant beyond Olympic years.

That promise, however, has been undermined by mounting financial instability.

- Advertisement -
MLK 728x90

Unpaid athletes and vendors signal trouble

Concerns over the league’s finances became public in October, when The Athletic reported that several top athletes were still owed six-figure sums. Vendors, meanwhile, were presented with a stark choice: accept 50 percent of what they were owed or risk the league filing for bankruptcy.

Many declined the offer, further accelerating the league’s downward spiral.

The league’s struggles crystallized in June, when Grand Slam Track abruptly canceled its Los Angeles meet, the fourth and final event scheduled for its inaugural season. The cancellation effectively ended the league’s debut campaign and foreshadowed the bankruptcy filing that followed months later.

A rebuild, not a goodbye

In its official statement, Grand Slam Track described the Chapter 11 process as a pathway forward rather than a surrender.

The reorganization, the league said, will provide “the ability to return for future seasons and pursue new initiatives, including through the expansion of participatory events, enhanced media offerings, and deeper connections with the global running community.”

Whether that vision can be revived remains uncertain, but for now, Grand Slam Track’s grand experiment has shifted from the track to the courtroom.

 

 

More Stories

Shockoria Wallace

Shockoria Wallace enters global spotlight as first Jamaican athlete to sign with Enhanced Games

Shockoria Wallace, a 32-year-old Jamaican sprinter, has become the first athlete from the island to sign on with the controversial Enhanced Games, a radical...
cricket

Rutherford and Peters ignite Pretoria Capitals’ surge to SA20 summit

Pretoria Capitals vaulted to the summit of the SA20 standings on Monday night, delivering a ferocious all-round performance that overwhelmed MI Cape Town by...
Danielle Williams

Danielle Williams sets global standard while Jamaicans rewrite collegiate record books

Jamaican athletes delivered a commanding weekend of performances on the U.S. indoor circuit, headlined by Danielle Williams’ world-leading sprint hurdles run and reinforced by...
Cricket West Indies

West Indies name Afghanistan squad as World Cup countdown begins

Cricket West Indies (CWI) has unveiled a 16-member squad for its three-match T20 International series against Afghanistan, marking the Caribbean side’s first major competitive...
Jamaican track stars Nickisha Pryce and Oblique Seville join Grand Slam Track for historic 2025 season

World’s fastest man Oblique Seville to make first US public appearance in South Florida

Jamaica’s dominance in global sprinting will be on full display in South Florida next month, as newly crowned 100-meter world champion Oblique Seville makes...

Roye and Haye take Jamaica to Latin America’s grandest amateur stage

The Jamaica Golf Association has confirmed that Zandre Roye and Oshae Haye will represent the nation at the 11th Latin America Amateur Golf Championship...
Shaw nets third as Man City stretch winning streak

Shaw the creator as Manchester City begin 2026 with WSL victory

Khadija “Bunny” Shaw played a decisive creative role as Manchester City launched the 2026 Women’s Super League campaign with a composed 2-0 victory over...
Super50 Cup

T20 Blaze and Super50 Cup launch a pivotal year for Caribbean women

Cricket West Indies (CWI) has ushered in a pivotal year for women’s cricket as the CG United Women’s Super50 Cup and the T20 Blaze...
Cricket West Indies

West Indies to finalize T20 World Cup squad after Afghanistan series

Cricket West Indies (CWI) has confirmed that it will wait until the conclusion of its upcoming T20 International series against Afghanistan before announcing the...
Chinelle Henry, Alleyne shine as Windies edge NZ in opener

Henry’s all-round brilliance not enough as Capitals fall in WPL opener

The 2026 Women’s Premier League (WPL) began on a sobering note for Caribbean standouts Chinelle Henry and Deandra Dottin, as both players found themselves...

Latest Articles

Skip to content